Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Alaska Plans To Vaccinate Tourists; Florida Vaccinates Foreign Students
Print article The state of Alaska will begin offering COVID-19 vaccinations to tourists arriving and departing the state through four of its biggest airports starting June 1, Gov. Mike Dunleavy said Friday. 鈥淭he idea is that we have access to vaccines, so why not use them? So this is what we鈥檙e saying to our tourists: If you come to Alaska 鈥 and this will start on June 1 鈥 if you come to Alaska, you get a free vaccination,鈥 he said. The vaccinations will be offered at the Anchorage, Juneau, Ketchikan and Fairbanks airports, said Heidi Hedberg, director of the Alaska Division of Public Health. (Brooks, 4/16)
Camila Guti茅rrez, an international student at Florida International University, got an email this week offering her the COVID-19 vaccine. She immediately signed up. The native of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, rushed to do so because she hasn鈥檛 been able to get immunized against the deadly virus, despite the minimum age restriction dropping to 18 about two weeks ago. (4/16)
As everyone in Massachusetts 16 or older becomes eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine Monday, health officials cautioned the state must do more to deliver doses to communities of color, which have been disproportionately hit by the pandemic. With appointments open to 1.7 million more residents, the state will reserve 20,000 appointments for communities of color for a week, starting Monday, at the John B. Hynes Veterans Memorial Convention Center mass-vaccination site, according to Governor Charlie Baker. A recent analysis found that Black and Latino communities have some of the lowest inoculation rates in the state. (Hilliard, 4/18)
When it comes to getting its patients vaccinated, the Department of Veterans Affairs health care system has in many ways been out ahead of its counterparts responsible for inoculating the general population. In several regions, the VA already has opened vaccinations to all its enrollees, regardless of age or health status. (Price, 4/16)
KHN: Snag A Vaccine Appointment, Then Face The Next Hurdle: How To Get There?
The airport says a lot about Cortez, Colorado: The single-engine planes that fly into its one-room airport seat nine passengers at most. The city of about 9,000 is known largely as a gateway to beautiful places like Mesa Verde National Park and the Four Corners Monument. But covid vaccines have made Cortez a destination in its own right. 鈥淲e had a couple fly in to get their vaccine from Denver that couldn鈥檛 get it in the Denver metro area,鈥 said Marc Meyer, director of pharmacy services and infection control for Southwest Health System, which includes clinics and a community hospital in Cortez. Others have come from neighboring states and as far away as California, Florida and the Carolinas. 鈥淭hey all come back for their second dose,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ecause it鈥檚 so hard to get in the cities.鈥 (Bichell, 4/19)
KHN: The Shock And Reality Of Catching Covid After Being Vaccinated聽
Robin Hauser, a pediatrician in Tampa, Fla., got covid in February. What separates her from the vast majority of the tens of millions of other Americans who have come down with the virus is this: She got sick seven weeks after her second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. 鈥淚 was shocked,鈥 said Hauser. 鈥淚 thought: 鈥榃hat the heck? How did that happen?鈥 I now tell everyone, including my colleagues, not to let their guard down after the vaccine.鈥 As more Americans every day are inoculated, a tiny but growing number are contending with the disturbing experience of getting covid despite having had one shot, or even two. (Findlay, 4/16)
In other news on the vaccine rollout 鈥
President Joe Biden, former President Barack Obama and a slew of celebrities including Billy Crystal, Jennifer Hudson and Lin-Manuel Miranda are part of a special aimed at boosting COVID-19 vaccination rates. 鈥淩oll Up Your Sleeves,鈥 airing at 7 p.m. EDT Sunday on NBC, will feature Matthew McConaughey interviewing Dr. Anthony Fauci to help separate 鈥渇act from fiction鈥 about the vaccines, the network said. (4/16)
The CEO of the Serum Institute of India, the world鈥檚 largest maker of vaccines, asked President Biden on Friday to lift a U.S. export embargo on raw materials for vaccines, saying it is hampering vaccine production in other parts of the world. Equitably producing and distributing coronavirus vaccines may be the defining global challenge of 2021 and a crucial step to controlling the pandemic, as prolonged unequal access to vaccines may allow the virus to spread and dangerously mutate in unvaccinated parts of the world. (Knutson, 4/16)
Also 鈥
Epidemiology is not high on your average teen鈥檚 list of hobbies. But it is for Andrew Brandt, a 13-year-old who lives in New Orleans and is enrolled in Pfizer鈥檚 Covid-19 vaccine trial for children. 鈥淲hen the pandemic started, it was sad because I did want to help people and I just kind of felt like I really couldn鈥檛 do that,鈥 Andrew tells CNBC Make It. Finding the Pfizer trial for his age group felt like a tangible way to pitch in, and also fit his interest in science and medicine. (Stieg, 4/17)
It鈥檚 not listed as a side effect, but women are reporting having irregular menstrual cycles after getting the coronavirus vaccine. Dr. Katharine Lee, a postdoctoral scholar in the public health department at Washington University in St. Louis, noticed her first cycle after getting the vaccine was 鈥渄ifferent,鈥 and wondered if she were the only one. She reached out to a few friends and colleagues, some of whom had also noticed something was a little off, too, Salon reported. (Clanton, 4/16)
One listing offered eBay customers an 鈥淎uthentic CDC Vaccination Record Card鈥 for $10.99. Another promised the same but for $9.49. A third was more oblique, offering a 鈥淐lear Pouch For CDC Vaccination Record Card鈥 for $8.99, but customers instead received a blank vaccination card (and no pouch).All three listings were posted by the same eBay user, who goes by 鈥渁sianjackson鈥 鈥 using an account registered to a man who works as a pharmacist in the Chicago area 鈥 and all were illegal, federal regulators say. The account sold more than 100 blank vaccination cards in the past two weeks, according to The Washington Post鈥檚 review of purchases linked to it. (Diamond, 4/18)
KHN: Journalists Unpack Patchwork Vaccine Rollout, Rapid Covid Tests And More
California Healthline correspondent Rachel Bluth unpacked California鈥檚 newly expanded vaccine eligibility rules and the state鈥檚 vaccine appointment website on KALW鈥檚 鈥淵our Call鈥 on Thursday. ... California Healthline correspondent Angela Hart discussed California cities鈥 experiment with city-managed homeless camps on KQED鈥檚 鈥淔orum鈥 on Thursday. ... Midwest editor and correspondent Laura Ungar joined a covid-19 reporter鈥檚 roundtable on Illinois Public Media鈥檚 鈥淭he 21st Show鈥 on Wednesday. Ungar also discussed gender-based vaccine disparities with KCBS on Tuesday. (4/17)